The former no. 29 Rue de Moliere

That was the address of this house when Dr. Sun Yatsen lived here, in the beautiful section of Shanghai known as the former French Concession. It’s now a museum, and the street is now known as Xiangshan Lu.

Since we will be discussing the 1911 Revolution in class Monday, I thought I might pay a visit to Sun’s former house this weekend.  While Sun was out of the country at the time the revolution took place, he is usually cited as the main inspiration for the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty and China’s revolutionary twentieth century.  It’s a small, pleasant museum, filled with memorabilia from Sun’s life and career.

It is interesting to note the way Sun is portrayed in this museum.  In Taiwan,  the national reputation of Sun is straightforwardly  heroic; there, he is seen as the founder of the Guomindang and the father of the Chinese republic.  Here in the PRC, however, Sun doesn’t fit as neatly or easily into the Communist Party’s hagiography of revolutionary heroes.

As the tablet pictured at left indicates, the museum emphasizes his “laying the foundation” for cooperation between the Nationalists and the Communists in China, was well as his anti-imperialist call to end the infamous “unequal treaties” that were imposed on China by western powers in the nineteenth century.

Sun’s desire to create a functioning Chinese republic never materialized, and when he died in 1925, China was riven by internal divisions and had fallen into a period of control by regional warlords.  Yet his memory and career still command respect in both Taiwan and the PRC, though in different ways, and certainly to a different degree.

2 Comments

June Grasso posted on July 3, 2013 at 12:13 am

Ni hao,
Sun’s legacy for the PRC is complex, as you point out so well in your summary. Since you mention shopping in another of your postings, I was wondering if you all have visited Shanghai’s No. One Dept. Store on Nanjing Rd. yet. Sun Yatsen was indirectly responsible for its establishment when he solicited funding and investment for China’s development from rich friends who lived overseas. The original store’s architecture was inspired by stores in NY and Boston.

cgschina posted on July 3, 2013 at 5:55 am

Ni hao, June!
Thanks for the comment. I have been on Nanjing Rd. a couple of times, but I didn’t know the story behind the store. I will be sure to check it out.
Xie xie,
John

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